Life-course Factors and Later Life Health in Eastern and Western Europe

IF 1.5 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY Comparative Population Studies Pub Date : 2023-06-06 DOI:10.12765/cpos-2023-10
Liili Abuladze, Uku Rudissaar, L. Sakkeus, K. Schwanitz
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Abstract

Human development and ageing are lifelong processes, where earlier life conditions and events are interlinked with later life outcomes. Patterns of inequality within and among cohorts emerge over time as products of the interplay between institutional arrangements and individual life, often dependent on childhood or earlier life circumstances. The life conditions and experiences of older adults in Eastern and Western Europe differ significantly, but whether their cumulative effects on later life outcomes vary across these two regions has not been compared. We explore the effects of socioeconomic position, the experience of a period of hunger, the dispossession of assets, and discrimination suffered by parents in respondents’ life courses on later life health inequalities in Europe. Self-reported health, everyday activity limitations, and cognitive functioning are the main outcomes that provide an adequate overview of different health domains. We mainly use data from the seventh wave of the Survey of Health, Ageing, and Retirement in Europe (SHARE 2017) and restrict our sample to respondents aged 65 and older from 26 European countries (N=41,566). We find that older people in Eastern Europe fare worse in self-rated health and everyday activity limitations than Western Europeans, while Eastern Europeans indicate somewhat better outcomes in cognitive functioning. A disadvantaged socioeconomic position in childhood and adulthood has the strongest association with all health outcomes, followed by the experience of hunger over the life course for the whole of Europe. However, we do not find diverging associations between life-course factors and health outcomes in Eastern and Western Europe. We argue that self-reported health, everyday activity limitations and cognitive functioning have to be analysed within their own frameworks and cannot yield conclusions that are uniform for all health outcomes. Moreover, major generalisations either about Eastern or Western Europe must be treated with caution as the regions have very different historical as well as demographic developments and thus cannot be treated as uniform. * This article belongs to a special issue on “Demographic Developments in Eastern and Western Europe Before and After the Transformation of Socialist Countries”.
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东欧和西欧的生命历程因素与晚年健康
人类发展和老龄化是一个终身过程,早期的生活条件和事件与后期的生活结果相互关联。随着时间的推移,群体内部和群体之间的不平等模式是制度安排和个人生活之间相互作用的产物,通常取决于童年或早年的生活环境。东欧和西欧老年人的生活条件和经历有很大差异,但这两个地区的老年人对以后生活结果的累积影响是否不同尚未进行比较。我们探讨了社会经济地位、饥饿经历、资产被剥夺以及父母在受访者生活课程中遭受的歧视对欧洲晚年健康不平等的影响。自我报告的健康状况、日常活动限制和认知功能是对不同健康领域进行充分概述的主要结果。我们主要使用第七波欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查(SHARE 2017)的数据,并将样本限制在来自26个欧洲国家的65岁及以上受访者(N=41566)。我们发现,东欧的老年人在自我评估的健康和日常活动限制方面比西欧人更差,而东欧人在认知功能方面表现出更好的结果。童年和成年时期处于不利社会经济地位与所有健康结果的关系最为密切,其次是整个欧洲一生中的饥饿经历。然而,在东欧和西欧,我们没有发现生命历程因素与健康结果之间的不同关联。我们认为,自我报告的健康状况、日常活动限制和认知功能必须在各自的框架内进行分析,不能得出对所有健康结果都一致的结论。此外,必须谨慎对待关于东欧或西欧的主要概括,因为这些地区的历史和人口发展非常不同,因此不能被视为统一的。*本文属于“社会主义国家转型前后东欧和西欧的人口发展”特刊。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
26 weeks
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